Traditional Chinese Nets Of Kochi: Symbols Of Cultural Bonding

Once a cultural symbol of Kerala, the much-photographed Chinese fishing nets are ill-maintained and fast disappearing from the Kochi coastline. The ingenious, but neglected, way of fishing has only remained a tourist attraction
The few remaining Chinese fishing nets in Kochi are a thing of beauty
The few remaining Chinese fishing nets in Kochi are a thing of beauty

My first memory of the Chinese fishing nets of Kochi is from my parents' photo album. The photograph is still so vivid in my memory. My mother is standing in a blue dress, wind in her hair, with the fishing nets in the background while the sun sets dramatically behind the nets. There are hardly any people around and the beach looks very clean. My father, a tea planter, started his career in the tea estates of Kerala and when he got married, he would take my mother to Cochin on weekends.

Fortunately or unfortunately, I don't really know, he moved to Darjeeling before I was born so the first time I saw these fishing nets was early this year, almost 30 years after my parents left. What was it like? you ask. Well, to say it was disappointing would be an understatement. And don't get me wrong, the few fishing nets that remain are a thing of beauty in whatever condition they might be, but what really broke my heart was the filth that surrounded them at the beach. 

Chinese fishing nets in Kochi paint a pretty picture, but the filth around them spoils it
Chinese fishing nets in Kochi paint a pretty picture, but the filth around them spoils it Alexey Komarov/ Wikimedia Commons

A Borrowed Heritage

Locally known as "Cheena Vala," these huge cantilevered fishing nets are believed to have been brought sometime between 1350 and 1450 by traders from the court of Kublai Khan. Some others say Chinese explorer Zhang introduced the nets to Kochi shores. While some accounts mention that the nets were set up by the Portuguese from Macau, an erstwhile Portuguese colony.  Irrespective of who brought them first, they are one of the most significant symbols of the rich exchange of culture and ideas that existed in the Indian subcontinent at the time. 

Operated from the shore, these nets are set up on bamboo and teak poles and held horizontally by huge mechanisms, which lower them into the sea. They look somewhat like hammocks and are counter-weighed by large stones tied to ropes, making for an ingenious way of fishing. The entire structure of the Chinese fishing nets is about 10 metres in height. Each fishing net spreads to about 20 metres above the water and is operated by a team of some six fishermen.  

The Chinese fishing nets have been in use for the last 500 years
The Chinese fishing nets have been in use for the last 500 years Jaseem Hamza/ Wikimedia Commons

Each net has a limited operating depth. Due to this, an individual net cannot be repeatedly operated in tidal waters. There are different fishing nets for operation, depending on the state of the tide. The whole paraphernalia is such that that the weight of a man walking along the main beam is sufficient to cause the net to descend into the sea. The net is submerged to remain underwater for about four-five minutes, before it is raised back by tugging the ropes. The catch might not be huge but it gets sold almost instantly owing to its freshness.

These fishing nets have been in use for the last 500 years and they are one of the biggest tourist draws in Kerala. So how is it that they are vanishing so fast from the coastline of Kochi?  Agreed that the huge maintenance costs and poor catch are forcing fishermen to look for other alternatives, but what are the local authorities doing to help?

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